Student Activists Demand Alternative Energies on Campus
The following is a press release sent to us by an anonymous group of students on UK's campus
LEXINGTON,
Ky: Tuesday, an anonymous group of students from the University of
Kentucky hung a banner from a parking structure near Rose Street to
protest the university’s use of coal power on campus. The banner,
reading “COAL: A Tradition of Oppression. STUDENTS: Let’s Change Our
Legacy”, included a reproduction of the familiar UK symbol, with a
burning smokestack between the letters instead of the usual Memorial
Hall steeple.
Deemed
the “midnight strike force” by local news sources, the students are
fueling a campaign to move the university beyond the “outdated”
technology of coal power and in the direction of cleaner energies. One
of the students, an economics and environmental studies senior, said,
“You can’t argue facts. Coal is a finite resource and the shift to
alternative energies has to begin immediately. Kentucky must realize
its potential to be progressive and enterprising in the country’s
transition toward environmental awareness.”
The
students’ use of the word “oppression” alludes to the detrimental
effects of coal not only on the environment, but on the miners and
communities in coal-mining regions of the state. An estimated 12,000
coal miners have died from black lung in the past decade, and their
families are equally affected. The real tragedy, though, lies in
mountaintop removal (MTR) coal mining, a practice that more and more
coal companies have used to extract coal at a lower cost. MTR employs
explosives to decapitate mountains, and the leftover waste is deposited
in surrounding valleys. The chemicals and residue bury and contaminate
freshwater streams, thus poisoning the water supply for surrounding
communities and devastating local ecosystems.
While
the university, directly, does not deal in MTR coal, Kentucky Utilities
provides a significant portion of the campus’s power, and is a known
distributor of energy derived from the controversial method.
“The
University of Kentucky is the flagship university of the state, and as
such, sets the example for the rest of Kentucky. Any change we can make
toward cleaner energy and the diversification of jobs and economies
will affect the entire Appalachian region drastically, and for the
better. This change is one that can’t wait,” said an Appalachian
Studies junior.
It
seems momentum has not died from the announcement last semester that
the new Wildcat Coal Lodge would be endorsed by the coal industry.
Tuesday’s banner was one of a series that has hung on campus since
October, indicating that the students have not forgotten President
Todd’s decision, and that they still worry for the future of their
school’s energy and integrity.
